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Los Lonely BoysLos Lonely Boys Live at ACL Festival on 2003-09-19 (September 19, 2003)

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Collection: LosLonelyBoys
Band/Artist: Los Lonely Boys
Date: September 19, 2003 (check for other copies)
Venue: ACL Festival
Location: Austin TX

Source: schoeps mk4v > vms02ib > modSBM > m1 (16/48)
Lineage: soundforge 8.0 (tracking, fades, resample) > flac 1.1.2
Taped by: shakerattlenroll (Scott Pendleton)
Transferred by: sleepypedro (pwking)


Description

Los Lonely Boys
September 19, 2003
ACL Festival - American Original Stage
Zilker Park grounds
Austin TX

*** THIS IS A 16-BIT FILESET INTENDED FOR AUDIO CD ***

DISK ONE
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Write a review
Downloaded 1,810 times
Reviews
Average Rating: 5.00 out of 5 stars5.00 out of 5 stars5.00 out of 5 stars5.00 out of 5 stars5.00 out of 5 stars

Reviewer: zolli - 5.00 out of 5 stars5.00 out of 5 stars5.00 out of 5 stars5.00 out of 5 stars5.00 out of 5 stars - August 22, 2008
Subject: Setlist
What a shame it took nearly 5 years for someone to check the tunes to provide a setlist and for rating this wonderful show.
I would rate it 4,5 stars, because of the absence of Cottenfields & Crossroads, but since this is not possible, I prefer to grade up, especially because the recording is also great...

Setlist
01 intro
02 Crazy Dream
03 Dime Mi Amor
04 Velvet Sky
05 Nobody Else
06 Tell Me Why
07 Onda
08 Señorita
09 Heaven
10 End Of A New Beginning

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5:37.02 59451548 --- -- -xx loslonelyboys2003-09-19_mk4v_t09.flac
7:19.39 77531372 --- -- -xx loslonelyboys2003-09-19_mk4v_t10.flac
59:10.03 626227496 B (totals for 10 files, 0.5201 overall compression ratio)



Los Lonely Boys, American Original Stage, 5:45 p.m.

Having Los Lonely Boys play the Austin City Limits Music Festival seemed almost redundant. The three Garza brothers from the wilds of San Angelo — bassist JoJo, guitarist Henry and drummer Ringo — appear to take their own festival with them. Or so one would surmise, given their tumultuous reception by a 5,000-strong crowd that has been primed by word of mouth or direct observation to crown the blues/rock/Tex-Mex trio the greatest thing since night baseball. (Kudos from no less than Willie Nelson, a fan of the boys, doesn't hurt, either).

Like all three of the previous shows this observer has witnessed, the band's set drew almost exclusively from the debut album, with the exception of the set-closing blues extrapolation, "End of A New Beginning," which exists as a framework for the trio's bag of showbiz tricks (duckwalks, behind-the-head guitar playing, etc.).

But why quibble, when the component songs on the album continue to receive such emphatic and vibrant treatment onstage? Hearing "Heaven" for the hundredth time, for instance, doesn't ruin the pleasure one takes in hearing those DNA-grooved harmonies once more, and the Santana-esque set piece "Onda" continues to grow in power and complexity (a neat trick on Friday, given that Ringo was as sick as the proverbial canine with some sort of stomach bug).

Los Lonely Boys' ecstatic reception by die-hard fans and newcomers alike might well have been the envy of many of the bigger acts playing on the higher-profile stages.



---------------

XL on ACL: Corcoran Review

Staples, Los Lonely Boys shine at music festival

By Michael Corcoran
Austin American-Statesman
Sept. 20, 2003

How's this for a perfect music festival moment? Mavis Staples, one of the greatest gospel singers in history, is singing "Will the Circle Be Unbroken?" and a rapturous crowd at the Austin City Limits Music Festival is digging in, and the sky is so beautifully sunset red that you'd think the Creator was weighing in.

Staples hasn't lost a bit of her otherworldly contralto, a voice that makes "hey" and "yeah" sound like genius lyrics. But her set's pacing, with lengthy bass and guitar solos during "Respect Yourself" and a singalong on "I'll Take You There," seemed intent on giving Staples and her sister, Yvonne, some breathers.

Though the 7:15 p.m. set was in what everyone referred to as the "gospel tent" (officially the American Original stage), Staples and her four-piece band stuck to the secular for the most part. And even if the set was a little short, all who were there can say that they saw Mavis Staples in all her glory.

Surprisingly, Staples' set was not the best-received at the Original stage Friday. That honor went to San Angelo's Los Lonely Boys, who kicked off their set at 5:45 p.m. and gave the audience an idea of what it might have been like to see the Beatles at the Cave Club in the early '60s.

The three Garza brothers, suddenly the hottest band in town, grabbed their rock star status and annihilated the youngish crowd by giving Latin strokes to Stevie Ray guitar licks and pumping out harmonies that made you forget they're basically a blues band.

If the tent holds 1,500, Los Lonely Boys played to 5,000, no exaggeration, as the revelers spread out in thick jubilation.

The other surprise on the Original stage was the relatively unheralded appearance by Austin's Electric Church at 2 p.m. The first discovery of the festival, at least for the hundred or so on hand, the group melded sacred music and techno to dazzling effect.

The choir, from Austin's Pleasant Grove Baptist Church, delivered full-fevered wailing over breakbeats to create a sound that would make as much sense at a rave as at a church. Drummer/band leader Erick Tatuaca, formerly of eLecTrosonic_ecstasy and Gahdzilla Motor Company, has worked with these singers for only four months.

If the audience's instant leap to its feet at the conclusion of "Glory To Your Name" is an indication, this hybrid soon may find a bigger audience.

It was only the first in a series of surprises at a tent dedicated to blues and gospel.


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